eclipsenow
Scripture is God's word, Science is God's works
- Dec 17, 2010
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Not at all. Paul uses the future tense to describe the last days, as does Peter. The last days can refer to either the days since Christ's resurrection, or the literal last days. It's either or. And those sorts of people have been around forever - they're just more abundant in the last days. See my above post![]()
No, not at all. They both instruct their followers to do certain things and avoid certain things based on the premise that their audiences were already IN the Last Days.
PS: Just saying they spoke in Future Tense does not make these verses go away, because they were highlighting how their generation (2000 years ago) had been warned their days would be like this. The Apostles were merely saying, "In the last days.... it will be like this... and you're seeing it here and now, friends!" So you just CANNOT divorce the command to people back then with the timetable that applied back then.
PPS: You've also completely refused to really deal with Acts 2, an unequivocal explanation that the Apostles had received the Holy Spirit because it was the Last Days starting!
Anyway, if anyone REALLY wants to know when the world is going to end, here's the answer.
How Gangnam Style is linked to the End of Times | News.com.au
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